This essay describes a study of how fans participate in memory-making activities. I call this activity participatory memory, blending theories from collective memory and participatory culture. Interestingly, while studying spaces of memory for Sherlock Holmes (the Canon) and BBC's Sherlock (2010–), I began to realize that these spaces have much to do with gender, generations, class, and cultural differences that helped regulate (and even segregate) different ways in which people were allowed to participate in the Sherlockian fandom
Using BBC Sherlock (2010–) fan fiction as case study, this article looks at how fans use and underst...
This thesis examines Sherlock Holmes texts (1886–1927) by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and their recreatio...
This book of interdisciplinary essays serves to situate the original Sherlock Holmes, and his variou...
This essay describes a study of how fans participate in memory-making activities. I call this activi...
This thesis studies Chinese fans of BBC’s Sherlock by exploring fan identity and fans’ online and of...
Building on professor of psychology Kenneth Pargament’s claim that people actively seek to establish...
The modes of discourse employed by fans of Sherlock Holmes represent both affirmational and transfor...
This article uses e-mail interviews with nine female fans to explore what it means to be a fan over ...
This study aims to understand how Chinese audiences have consumed and engaged in BBC’s Sherlock as a...
This study investigates a consumer's relationship with mass media and the cultivation of the consume...
One of the more prominent examples of transmediality associated with the Sherlock television program...
This thesis challenges established scholarship on fan cultures—based on foundational assumptions of ...
Lines of Distinction establishes a critical framework for the study of relationship dynamics within ...
Online fanfiction communities are increasingly coming to light as an independent manifestation of an...
Cultural Memory and its functions in the case of Božena Němcová The presented thesis is concerned wi...
Using BBC Sherlock (2010–) fan fiction as case study, this article looks at how fans use and underst...
This thesis examines Sherlock Holmes texts (1886–1927) by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and their recreatio...
This book of interdisciplinary essays serves to situate the original Sherlock Holmes, and his variou...
This essay describes a study of how fans participate in memory-making activities. I call this activi...
This thesis studies Chinese fans of BBC’s Sherlock by exploring fan identity and fans’ online and of...
Building on professor of psychology Kenneth Pargament’s claim that people actively seek to establish...
The modes of discourse employed by fans of Sherlock Holmes represent both affirmational and transfor...
This article uses e-mail interviews with nine female fans to explore what it means to be a fan over ...
This study aims to understand how Chinese audiences have consumed and engaged in BBC’s Sherlock as a...
This study investigates a consumer's relationship with mass media and the cultivation of the consume...
One of the more prominent examples of transmediality associated with the Sherlock television program...
This thesis challenges established scholarship on fan cultures—based on foundational assumptions of ...
Lines of Distinction establishes a critical framework for the study of relationship dynamics within ...
Online fanfiction communities are increasingly coming to light as an independent manifestation of an...
Cultural Memory and its functions in the case of Božena Němcová The presented thesis is concerned wi...
Using BBC Sherlock (2010–) fan fiction as case study, this article looks at how fans use and underst...
This thesis examines Sherlock Holmes texts (1886–1927) by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and their recreatio...
This book of interdisciplinary essays serves to situate the original Sherlock Holmes, and his variou...